
Sean Deery
Founder & Chief Strategic Officer
How the United States Can Build a Sovereign Wealth Fund and Restructure National Prosperity for the Next Century
Around the world, sovereign wealth funds have become the backbone of long-term national prosperity. Nations such as Norway, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates have used sovereign capital to diversify their economies, stabilize government finances, reduce reliance on taxation, and generate intergenerational wealth.
These funds serve as strategic instruments that strengthen national resilience and provide countries with the ability to invest, innovate, and influence global markets.
Despite having the world’s largest and most dynamic economy, the United States has never developed a sovereign wealth strategy. Instead of converting national assets into long-term equity, America relies heavily on debt financing, short-term budget cycles, and taxation. This creates a structural vulnerability in a world where economic competition is increasingly driven by capital strength rather than purely industrial output. The United States does not need a sovereign wealth fund to emulate other countries. It needs one to build an American model of enduring prosperity—one capable of reinforcing national security, strengthening the economic base, and securing the nation’s long-term financial future.
I. Why the United States Needs a Sovereign Wealth Fund
America is simultaneously the wealthiest economy in the world and one of the few major powers without an institutional investment engine owned by its citizens. National prosperity requires more than economic output—it requires the ability to convert national capability into national wealth. Other advanced nations recognized long ago that sovereign capital reduces vulnerability to inflation cycles, foreign supply chains, and geopolitical shocks.
A sovereign wealth fund would give the U.S. the ability to shift from reactive fiscal policy to proactive national investment. Instead of relying on borrowed capital, the nation could begin compounding its own wealth, building reserves that enhance resilience, stabilize long-term budgeting, and drive strategic development.
II. The Core Strategy: Funding the System with Value, Not Taxes
A U.S. sovereign wealth fund does not require raising taxes or expanding federal burden. The United States already controls some of the most valuable economic assets on the planet—federal land, energy reserves, offshore access, mineral rights, intellectual property, spectrum allocation, federal leasing revenue, and strategic resource holdings. The challenge has never been scarcity. It has been the absence of an integrated strategy for capturing and investing this value.
By monetizing underutilized federal assets, structuring commercial partnerships, and leveraging existing national capabilities, the U.S. can capitalize the fund without extracting additional income from taxpayers. This model aligns public value with long-term national benefit.
III. The Governance Model: Independent, Professional, and Apolitical
A successful sovereign wealth fund must operate as an investment institution—not as a political extension of the federal government. Independence from political cycles is essential. Governance must be managed by world-class investment professionals who adhere to strict transparency, fiduciary responsibility, and long-term performance metrics.
The strongest sovereign funds in the world balance public ownership with private-sector discipline. The United States can create a governance model that protects the fund from partisan influence, ensures professional management, and secures public trust through rigorous accountability.
IV. Investment Priorities: Building the National Prosperity Portfolio
A U.S. sovereign wealth fund would instantly become one of the most powerful capital allocators in the world. Its portfolio could strengthen strategic domestic industries such as energy, manufacturing, AI, infrastructure, clean water, transportation, agriculture, semiconductor fabrication, and critical mineral supply chains. Internationally, the fund could invest in high-return sovereign partnerships, infrastructure corridors, technology breakthroughs, and global opportunities that align with American interests.
The goal is not merely diversification. It is national advancement through targeted investment in industries that shape the future—quantum computing, cyber defense, biotech, space technology, renewable power, advanced materials, and secure data ecosystems.
V. Transformational National Benefits
A sovereign wealth fund provides advantages that traditional fiscal policy cannot. It reduces dependence on deficit spending, strengthens national balance sheets, and stabilizes the economy against inflation and global volatility. It allows the country to fund major infrastructure—internet grids, ports, highways, bridges, energy systems—without raising taxes or accumulating debt.
Most importantly, it enables the U.S. to invest generationally. The nation builds wealth for the future instead of financing the present through obligations pushed onto the next generation.
VI. Job Creation and Industrial Expansion
A sovereign wealth fund does more than accumulate capital. It catalyzes domestic industry through strategic investment. As funding flows into manufacturing, infrastructure, energy, transportation, and technology, it spurs job creation across all skill levels—engineering, construction, logistics, research, operations, and advanced manufacturing.
This is investment-driven economic growth—not government stimulus. It strengthens supply chains, revitalizes cities, and enhances America’s capacity to compete in a global industrial landscape.
VII. The Role of the Private Sector
The private sector must be an equal partner in this effort. Government alone lacks the speed, innovation, and execution capacity required to manage a modern sovereign fund. Collaboration with private enterprise, sovereign investors, institutional capital, and global industry leaders is essential. This partnership can produce a governance system that is professional, commercially disciplined, and aligned with national priorities.
A U.S. sovereign wealth fund is not a government program—it is a national investment engine.
VIII. The Funding Blueprint
The path forward is clear. The U.S. can begin by monetizing strategic federal assets and channeling the revenue into an independently governed fund. Once capitalized, the fund can deploy resources into domestic industries that strengthen competitiveness and national resilience. As it grows, the fund can expand into global investment strategies that reinforce diplomatic ties, strategic alliances, and American influence.
The key is compounding. The fund grows not through taxation or spending, but through disciplined investment performance.
IX. Strategic Impact for Investors, Policymakers, and Corporate Executives
A sovereign wealth fund realigns the relationship between national strategy, private capital, and corporate innovation. Investors gain a stable, long-horizon platform for infrastructure, clean energy, manufacturing, and technological transformation. Policymakers gain a tool for proactive national planning rather than reactive crisis management. Corporate executives gain access to a long-term investment partner capable of supporting expansion, innovation, and industrial scaling.
It creates a structural advantage that no budget cycle could ever match.
X. Geopolitical Implications and Global Positioning
A U.S. sovereign wealth fund would dramatically reshape global economic influence. Today’s sovereign investors use capital to forge alliances, secure critical resources, and shape the direction of global markets. Without a sovereign fund, the United States relies primarily on military and diplomatic channels to project power—while other nations use capital as a strategic weapon.
A national investment fund allows the U.S. to purchase strategic assets, strengthen partners, and counter the influence of foreign sovereign funds. It protects American industries from foreign acquisition, secures supply chains, and positions the U.S. as a dominant investor across emerging sectors.
Capital becomes a form of national strength equal to technological or military advantage.
Conclusion: The United States Can Build the Most Strategic Sovereign Wealth Fund in the World
A sovereign wealth fund is not merely a policy proposal. It is a national imperative. The United States cannot sustain long-term prosperity through debt and taxation alone. It must build investment architecture capable of transforming national capability into national wealth. A U.S. sovereign wealth fund would redefine economic strength, expand national resilience, and secure prosperity for generations.
Hunting Maguire Signature Perspective
The future of American power will be shaped not by short-term budgets but by long-term investment. A sovereign wealth fund gives the United States the financial infrastructure required to protect its interests, expand its influence, and build enduring national prosperity. It transforms America from a nation that borrows its future into a nation that owns it.